France, UK trade blame after 27 die in migrant tragedy

PARIS, 27 November 2021, (TON): France and Britain traded blame after 27 people died trying to cross the Channel in an inflatable dinghy, the worst accident of its kind on record in the waterway separating the two countries.

With relations fraught by years of tension over Brexit and immigration, much of the focus was on who should bear responsibility, even if both sides vowed to work together to find joint solutions.

“There is bad immigration management (in Britain)” French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin told media, while calling on other European countries, which migrants cross on their way to French shores and then Britain, to do more to help.

Darmanin said “it’s an international problem.”

One smuggler arrested overnight had bought dinghies in Germany, he said “we tell our Belgian, German and British friends they should help us fight traffickers who work at an international level.”

His British counterpart Priti Patel said she would be having talks with Darmanin, hours after Prime Minister Boris Johnson put the blame on France, saying “we have had difficulty persuading some of our partners, particularly the French, to do things in a way that we think the situation deserves.”

Meanwhile, rescue volunteers and rights groups said the catastrophic drowning was to be expected as smugglers and migrants take more risks to avoid a growing police presence.

The Auberge de Migrants NGO said “to accuse only the smugglers is to hide the responsibility of the French and British authorities.”

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